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A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
08 May 2009, 15:11

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Difficulty:

45% (medium)

Question Stats:

66%(02:33) correct
34%(01:42) wrong based on 1225 sessions

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase as the result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basis that the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.

Each of following, if true, provides some support for the historians’ account described above EXCEPT:

(A) In East Africa gold coins from Mediterranean North Africa have been found at a tenth-century site but at no earlier sites.(B) The many surviving letters of pre-tenth-century North African merchants include no mention of business transactions involving East Africa.(C) Excavations in East Africa reveal a tenth-century change in architectural style to reflect North African patterns.(D) Documents from Mediterranean Europe and North Africa that date back earlier than the tenth century show knowledge of East African animals.(E) East African carvings in a style characteristic of the tenth century depict seagoing vessels very different from those used by local sailors but of a type common in the Mediterranean.

IMO D. The argument: East African & North African (near Mediteranean coast) began trading to each other no earlier than 10 century

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterraneancoast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase asthe result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basis that theimportant medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.Each of following, if true, provides some support for the historians’ account describedabove EXCEPT:A. In East Africa gold coins from Mediterranean North Africa have been found at atenth-century site but at no earlier sites -->gold coins mean business, so this strengthens that their business - East & North Africa near Mediteranean, began no earlier than 10-centuryB. The many surviving letters of pre-tenth-century North African merchants includeno mention of business transactions involving East Africa --> this eliminates any possibility that North & East have trading to each other earlier than 10 century, thus strengthening the argumentC. Excavations in East Africa reveal a tenth-century change in architectural style toreflect North African patterns -->strengthen. From 10 century, East African has been influenced by North African's architecture. This means they began a relation at 10 century, and it was likely business relationD. Documents from Mediterranean Europe and North Africa that date back earlierthan the tenth century show knowledge of East African animals -->this mentions about pre 10 century but shows no relations between North African Mediteranean coast & East Africa. It neither strengthens nor weakens, thus the bestE. East African carvings in a style characteristic of the tenth century depict seagoingvessels very different from those used by local sailors but of a type common inthe Mediterranean --> strengthen. At 10 century, East African had seagoing evidences related to that of Mediteranean coast, and because those can be of the Mediteranean coast of North African, so it connects East African & North African mediteranean coast

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
16 Feb 2012, 05:07

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase as the result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basis that the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period. Each of following, if true, provides some support for the historians’ account describedabove EXCEPT:A. In East Africa gold coins from Mediterranean North Africa have been found at a tenthcentury site but at no earlier sites.B. The many surviving letters of pre-tenth-century North African merchants include no mention of business transactions involving East Africa.C. Excavations in East Africa reveal a tenth-century change in architectural style to reflect North African patterns.D. Documents from Mediterranean Europe and North Africa that date back earlier than the tenth century show knowledge of East African animals.E. East African carvings in a style characteristic of the tenth century depict seagoing vessels very different from those used by local sailors but of a type common in the Mediterranean

The conclusion is: the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period (10th century). We have to find an option that does not strengthen the conclusion. A: Coins from N. Africa have been found at E. African sites dating back to 10th century, but not at sites older than 10th century. (Does strengthen the argument)B: Surviving letters from pre/ before 10th century make no mention of any trade between North and East Africa. Does strengthen the argument).C: Excavations in E. Africa changed around 10th century to reflect N. African architecture. Does strengthen.D: Knowledge of E. African animals (possibly elephants- the source of ivory also) before 10th century. It could mean that N. Africa knew of elephants before 10th century, and the trade in Ivory began before the 10th century. (Weakens the argument)E: Seems irrelevant as there is no reference to N. Africa.

In the answer choices, we are looking for a cultural interchange between the two parts of Africa beginning in the tenth century. The idea is that the two cultures came in contact once the North Africans began trading ivory to the East Africans in the tenth century, but not before.

(A), (B), (C), and (E) all provide evidence that the two cultures began interacting in the 10th century.

(D) CORRECT Here the North Africans only have knowledge of East African animals, say rhinos. That North Africans know about rhinos has nothing to do with whether Africans began trading with East Africans.

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
09 Apr 2012, 06:44

1

This post receivedKUDOS

hemantsood wrote:

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase as the result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basis that the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.

Each of following, if true, provides some support for the historians’ account described above EXCEPT:

(A) In East Africa gold coins from Mediterranean North Africa have been found at a tenth-century site but at no earlier sites.(B) The many surviving letters of pre-tenth-century North African merchants include no mention of business transactions involving East Africa.(C) Excavations in East Africa reveal a tenth-century change in architectural style to reflect North African patterns.(D) Documents from Mediterranean Europe and North Africa that date back earlier than the tenth century show knowledge of East African animals.(E) East African carvings in a style characteristic of the tenth century depict seagoing vessels very different from those used by local sailors but of a type common in the Mediterranean.

OA after couple of replies with explanation.

A. supportsB. supportsC. supportsD. weakensE. supports

Hence the weakens is the correct answer _________________

Regards, Harsha

Note: Give me kudos if my approach is right , else help me understand where i am missing.. I want to bell the GMAT Cat

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
10 Apr 2013, 21:06

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase as the result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basis that the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.

Each of following, if true, provides some support for the historians’ account described above EXCEPT:

(A) In East Africa gold coins from Mediterranean North Africa have been found at a tenth-century site but at no earlier sites.proves that before 10th century there was no trade between north and east(B) The many surviving letters of pre-tenth-century North African merchants include no mention of business transactions involving East Africa.proves that before 10th century there was no trade between north and east(C) Excavations in East Africa reveal a tenth-century change in architectural style to reflect North African patterns.change in architecture is apropos to the trade between North and East(D) Documents from Mediterranean Europe and North Africa that date back earlier than the tenth century show knowledge of East African animals. shows trade before 10th century hence doesn't provide support(E) East African carvings in a style characteristic of the tenth century depict seagoing vessels very different from those used by local sailors but of a type common in the Mediterranean.proves that before 10th century there was no trade between north and east

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
02 Aug 2013, 19:41

hi, i'n new here.

i know the OA is D and i understand why. But before i read the answer choices, i assumed the supporting answer should say that North and East Africa traded 'IVORY', but not anything else. Shouldn't that make more sense?

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
02 Aug 2013, 23:17

maggiegecby wrote:

hi, i'n new here.

i know the OA is D and i understand why. But before i read the answer choices, i assumed the supporting answer should say that North and East Africa traded 'IVORY', but not anything else. Shouldn't that make more sense?

wish i've explained my question clearly.

What was being traded for the Ivory? Trade involves at least two items be it money for goods or an exchange of goods. _________________

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
02 Aug 2013, 23:36

MzJavert wrote:

maggiegecby wrote:

hi, i'n new here.

i know the OA is D and i understand why. But before i read the answer choices, i assumed the supporting answer should say that North and East Africa traded 'IVORY', but not anything else. Shouldn't that make more sense?

wish i've explained my question clearly.

What was being traded for the Ivory? Trade involves at least two items be it money for goods or an exchange of goods.

i mean the historians think that the beginning of trade during that time can explain the increase in the production of ivory artifacts, right? but the answer choices, i mean the supporting ones, only emphasize on the beginning of trade at time, shouldn't they focus on the thing they are trading for?

I mean if NA and EA began the trade at that time, but EA never buy any ivory artifacts from NA, then how can it support historians' explanation?

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
02 Aug 2013, 23:55

maggiegecby wrote:

MzJavert wrote:

maggiegecby wrote:

hi, i'n new here.

i know the OA is D and i understand why. But before i read the answer choices, i assumed the supporting answer should say that North and East Africa traded 'IVORY', but not anything else. Shouldn't that make more sense?

wish i've explained my question clearly.

What was being traded for the Ivory? Trade involves at least two items be it money for goods or an exchange of goods.

i mean the historians think that the beginning of trade during that time can explain the increase in the production of ivory artifacts, right? but the answer choices, i mean the supporting ones, only emphasize on the beginning of trade at time, shouldn't they focus on the thing they are trading for?

I mean if NA and EA began the trade at that time, but EA never buy any ivory artifacts from NA, then how can it support historians' explanation?

hi maggie,

the highlited portion is not correct IMO.

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase as the result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basisthat the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.

IN THE ARGUMENT IT SAYS THAT A NEW SOURCE OF IVORY WAS FOUND ...AND ON THE BASIS OF THAT HISTORIANS ARGUE THAT :the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.===>SO TRADE DOESNT LED TO INCREASE IN THE PRODUCTION OF ARTIFACTS.

hope it helps _________________

When you want to succeed as bad as you want to breathe ...then you will be successfull....

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
03 Aug 2013, 00:28

hi maggie,

the highlited portion is not correct IMO.

A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory artifacts on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa occurred in the tenth century. Historians explain this increase as the result of an area opening up as a new source of ivory and argue on this basisthat the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.

IN THE ARGUMENT IT SAYS THAT A NEW SOURCE OF IVORY WAS FOUND ...AND ON THE BASIS OF THAT HISTORIANS ARGUE THAT :the important medieval trade between North Africa and East Africa began at this period.===>SO TRADE DOESNT LED TO INCREASE IN THE PRODUCTION OF ARTIFACTS.

hope it helps[/quote]

Hi, thanks! that really helps. so a new source led to the increase right? then why does the author need to mention the trade here? i don't get this part. "argue on this basis" means "argue on the basis of the new source of invory" right?

Re: A sudden increase in the production of elephant ivory [#permalink]
03 Aug 2013, 00:35

1

This post receivedKUDOS

maggiegecby wrote:

Hi, thanks! that really helps. so a new source led to the increase right? then why does the author need to mention the trade here? i don't get this part. "argue on this basis" means "argue on the basis of the new source of invory" right?

yes true that is not related actually...but GMAT does this this to confuse the test takers...by merging two things...first the topic is regarding historians finding reason that how the ivory artfact number increased...then suddenly new topic is merged(which is rather main topic for this question).===>that historians assumed that trade started during this time....so finally according to question stem you have just to focus on trade thing.

so a takeaway will be : when there is EXCEPT question ...dont prethink the answer...rather understand the argument and then start eliminating wrong answers.

hope it helps _________________

When you want to succeed as bad as you want to breathe ...then you will be successfull....